HP A6616 Installation Manual page 154

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Enter file No:
Select a file number, which is 1 in this example. The following information
appears:
Modify the file attribute:
=========================================================================
|<1> +Main
|<2> -Main
|<3> +Backup
|<4> -Backup
|<0> Exit
=========================================================================
Enter your choice(0-4):
You can set the attribute of the selected configuration file to M (main) or B (backup), or cancel
the setting by selecting a choice from 1 to 4.
In this example, 1 is selected and the system changes the file startup.cfg from type N/A to type
M.
Set the file attribute success!
Now, the attribute of the file startup_bak2.cfg has automatically changed from M to N/A.
After selecting 3 from the file control sub-menu, if you select 0 to exit the menu, the system
enters the default mode for the main and backup configuration files, namely the files
cfa0:/main.cfg and/or cfa0:/backup.cfg, if any, are automatically assigned the M and/or B
attributes respectively.
Setting configuration file attributes at the CLI
You can use the startup saved-configuration cfgfile [ backup | main ] command to define the
configuration file to be used for the next boot and its attribute. In this command, use cfgfile
argument to specify the configuration file name.
Note that:
You can use the startup saved-configuration cfgfile main command to change the attribute of
an N/A-type configuration file to M.
You can use the startup saved-configuration cfgfile backup command to change the
attribute of an N/A-type configuration file to B.
You can use the startup saved-configuration cfgfile backup command to change the
attribute of an M-type configuration file to M + B.
You can use the startup saved-configuration cfgfile main command to change the attribute of
a B-type configuration file to M + B.
If you use neither main nor backup in your command, you assign the M attribute to the
specified configuration file.
If you assign the M attribute to a configuration file, the attribute of the existing main
configuration file, if any, is automatically erased, because there can be only one main
configuration file in the system at a time.
If you assign the B attribute to a configuration file, the attribute of the existing backup
configuration file, if any, is automatically erased, because there can be only one backup
configuration file in the system at a time.
You can use the undo startup saved-configuration command to erase the main and backup
attributes of the configuration files. Namely, the system has no longer a main, nor a backup
configuration file after this command.
# Define the file startup.cfg as the backup configuration file for the next system boot.
<HP> startup saved-configuration startup.cfg backup
Please wait......Done!
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